IEA Report Dated 3-13-2015

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dan_s
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Joined: Fri Apr 23, 2010 8:22 am

IEA Report Dated 3-13-2015

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The IEA's monthly report is what drove down oil prices. There are a few encouraging signs, but we need to see U.S. supply growth halted before crude oil prices will begin to move higher. Note that when they say "oil" they are referring to all liquids (crude oil + NGLs). - Dan

> Crude oil prices stabilised following early-February gains, with ICE Brent rising more than NYMEX WTI which was weighed down by swelling US stockpiles. At the time of writing, Brent was trading at around $58/bbl - up nearly 30% from a six-year low in January. WTI was at around $48/bbl.

> Having bottomed-out in 2Q14, global oil demand growth has since steadily risen, with year-on-year gains estimated at around 0.9 mb/d for 4Q14 and 1.0 mb/d for 1Q15. The forecast of demand growth for 2015 as a whole has been raised by 75 kb/d to 1.0 mb/d, bringing global demand to an average 93.5 mb/d. [IEA now expects Q4 2015 demand to be over 94.5 million bbls per day.]

> Global supply rose by 1.3 mb/d year-on-year to an estimated 94 mb/d in February, led by a 1.4 mb/d gain in non-OPEC. Declines in the US rig count have yet to dent North American output growth. Final December and preliminary 1Q15 data show higher-than-expected US crude supply, raising the 2015 North American outlook.

> OPEC crude output edged down by 90 kb/d in February to 30.22 mb/d, as losses in Libya and Iraq offset higher supply from Saudi Arabia, Iran and Angola. A slightly higher demand forecast has raised the 2H15 'call' on OPEC crude to 30.3 mb/d, above the group's official 30 mb/d target.

> Global crude refinery throughputs estimates have been raised to 77.8 mb/d for 1Q15 and 77.3 mb/d for 2Q15, on sustained high margins and a slightly more robust oil demand outlook. Annual gains are forecast around 1.0 mb/d in 1H15, down from a sharp 2.2 mb/d in 4Q14, and in line with projected oil product demand growth.

> OECD commercial stocks rose by a weaker-than-average 23.1 mb in January, to 2 733 mb, trimming their surplus to average levels to 60.3 mb. US crude stocks rose to a record 72 mb surplus. Preliminary data show stocks drew by a weak 8.8 mb in February as extended US crude builds offset steep weather-related product draws.


Head fake

The partial rebound in oil prices that occurred in late January and early February seems to have marked a pause. Prices have since become range-bound, with Brent futures trading around $60/bbl and WTI closer to $50/bbl, and at the time of writing slightly below those levels. On the face of it, the oil price appears to be stabilising. What a precarious balance it is, however.

Behind the façade of stability, the rebalancing triggered by the price collapse has yet to run its course, and it might be overly optimistic to expect it to proceed smoothly. Steep drops in the US rig count have been a key driver of the price rebound. Yet US supply so far shows precious little sign of slowing down. Quite to the contrary, it continues to defy expectations. Output estimates for 4Q14 North American supply have been revised upwards by a steep 300 kb/d. The projection of 1Q15 supply has also been raised. Plunging US crude throughputs - due to seasonal and unplanned refinery outages, as well as weak margins and high gasoline stock builds in December - have seen US crude inventories soar, compounding the impact of robust supply growth. At last count, total US crude stocks stood at 468 mb, an all-time record. [My take is that it takes about six months for the declining active rig count to show up in declining supply. It is not the drilling of wells that increases supply, but the completing of wells and connecting them to gathering. - Dan]

The unwinding of seasonal refinery maintenance may slow US crude stock builds in 2Q15 but will not stop them, and stocks may soon test storage capacity limits. That would inevitably lead to renewed price weakness, which in turn could trigger the supply cuts that have so far remained elusive. While the US supply response to lower prices might take longer to kick in than expected, it might also prove more abrupt.

At the same time, supply disruption risks are on the rise. Producer countries that depend on high oil prices and that do not enjoy large buffers will find it hard to balance their budget and fund social spending programs at current prices. That is not a recipe for social stability. The surging dollar will also make it harder for companies such as cash-strapped Petrobras to pay back dollar debt and overcome financial hurdles. Iraq and Libya continue to experience disruptions amid MENA political turmoil.

Product markets, meanwhile, have proved unexpectedly strong. Not only have product prices lagged those of crude during the selloff - as is common in a downturn -- but they have raced ahead of them in the rebound, keeping refining margins remarkably firm, and supporting unexpectedly strong throughputs in once-depressed refining centres such as Europe and OECD Asia. Product demand has shown signs of life, with even European demand emerging from a secular decline to show strong growth of 3.2% in December and 0.9% in January. That demand strength has widened the deficit of OECD product inventories to their seasonal average, a trend largely obscured by surging US crude stocks. [My take is that increasing product demand due to lower prices will show up big this summer. - Dan]

Whether such strength in product demand and refining activity can be sustained is unclear. Both have benefited from one-off factors. Frigid weather in North America has raised heating demand, drawing distillates from across the Atlantic. Refinery outages in North and South America have also helped support margins elsewhere and fuelled long-haul product trade. Distillate cargoes were booked from as far off as Saudi Arabia and the UAE to make up for outages in Brazil and the US East Coast.

Demand may also have been supported by opportunistic buying and growing interest in storage plays. While that would have helped tighten product markets, such demand is less sustainable than that driven by underlying economic growth, and there are still few firm signs at this stage that lower prices are giving the economy a real boost. China, for one, remains in cooling mode. Then again, information about demand lags supply and tends to be sketchier, so it may take time for any pickup in demand to be fully captured in the data. As to refining margins, the ramp up of activity at new Middle East refineries, coinciding with a seasonal downturn in global demand, might soon depress them.

Facing exceptional uncertainty, many market participants remain on the fence. But market forces are not sitting still.
Dan Steffens
Energy Prospectus Group
dan_s
Posts: 37308
Joined: Fri Apr 23, 2010 8:22 am

Re: IEA Report Dated 3-13-2015

Post by dan_s »

In the Energy Information Administration’s latest Short Term Energy Outlook, the EIA forecasts crude oil production to peak in the second quarter of this year and then decline by 180,000 barrels per day in the third quarter
Dan Steffens
Energy Prospectus Group
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